This document is unfortunately not available for download at the moment.
Logische Untersuchungen (Logical Investigations), which gave him a fundamental philosophical orientation that he never lost. In Göttingen he also studied with Husserl's assistant, Adolf Reinach, whom he always venerated as his real teacher in philosophy. Max Scheler lived in Göttingen at this time, and in fact shared an apartment with von Hildebrand, who acknowledged receiving immeasurably much for his moral philosophy from his fifteen-year association with Scheler. In 1912 von Hildebrand received his doctorate in Göttingen with a dissertation entitled "Die Idee der sittlichen Handlung" (The idea of moral action).1 Husserl wrote in his evaluation of it: "I almost want to say that the genius of Adolf von Hildebrand has been inherited by his son, the author, as a philosophical genius." He also said that von Hildebrand "astonishes the reader by an incomparably intimate knowledge of the various formations of affective consciousness and their objective correlates."2 Husserl published the dissertation in its entirety in his Jahrbuch für Philosophie und phänomenologische Forschung in 1916. It has recently come to light that Husserl made repeated use of it in his own research.3" />
pp. 475-496
This document is unfortunately not available for download at the moment.